Title of article :
Laboratory experiments on the impact disruption of iron meteorites at temperature of near-Earth space
Author/Authors :
Katsura، نويسنده , , Takekuni and Nakamura، نويسنده , , Akiko M. and Takabe، نويسنده , , Ayana and Okamoto، نويسنده , , Takaya and Sangen، نويسنده , , Kazuyoshi and Hasegawa، نويسنده , , Sunao and Liu، نويسنده , , Xun and Mashimo، نويسنده , , Tsutomu، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
Iron meteorites and some M-class asteroids are generally understood to be fragments that were originally part of cores of differentiated planetesimals or part of local melt pools on primitive bodies. The parent bodies of iron meteorites may have formed in the terrestrial planet region, from which they were then scattered into the main belt (Bottke, W.F., Nesvorný, D., Grimm, R.E., Morbidelli, A., O’Brien, D.P. [2006]. Nature 439, 821–824). Therefore, a wide range of collisional events at different mass scales, temperatures, and impact velocities would have occurred between the time when the iron was segregated and the impact that eventually exposed the iron meteorites to interplanetary space. In this study, we performed impact disruption experiments of iron meteorite specimens as projectiles or targets at room temperature to increase understanding of the disruption process of iron bodies in near-Earth space. Our iron specimens (as projectiles or targets) were almost all smaller in size than their counterparts (as targets or projectiles, respectively). Experiments of impacts of steel specimens were also conducted for comparison.
agment mass distribution of the iron material was different from that of rocks. In the iron fragmentation, a higher percentage of the mass was concentrated in larger fragments, probably due to the ductile nature of the material at room temperature. The largest fragment mass fraction f was dependent not only on the energy density but also on the size d of the specimen. We assumed a power-law dependence of the largest fragment mass fraction to initial peak pressure P0 normalized by a dynamic strength, Y, which was defined to be dependent on the size of the iron material. A least squares fit to the data of iron meteorite specimens resulted in the following relationship: f ∝ P 0 Y - 2.1 ± 0.2 ∝ d - 0.87 ± 0.15 , indicating a large size dependence of f. Additionally, the deformation of the iron materials in high-velocity shots was found to be most significant when the initial pressure greatly exceeded the dynamic strength of the material.
Keywords :
Impact processes , Collisional physics , Asteroids , meteorites